An influential coalition of environmental and business leaders has today sent
an open letter to Gordon Brown calling on him to ensure that money raised from
auctioning carbon emission permits under the European Emissions Trading Scheme
(ETS) is reinvested in tackling climate change.
The letter – which is signed by
CBI
director-general Richard Lambert, chairman of the CBI Climate Change Board and
BT chief executive Ben Verwaayen, co-chair of the
Energy Research
Partnership and E.ON UK chief executive Paul Golby, and David Nussbaum,
chief executive of WWF-UK –
argues that with the government expected to raise £1.6bn from selling emission
permits between 2008 and 2012 it has been presented with a "tremendous
opportunity" to underline its commitment to tackling climate change.
The letter claims that while the group supports the case for auctioning
carbon credits as part of the cap-and-trade scheme it still represents a "
substantial additional transfer of funds from business and consumers to
government", and as such the government should announce "an equivalent scale
investment in securing the transition to a low-carbon economy and in adaptation
".
Lambert warned that a failure to ring fence auction revenues in this way
would undermine the government's attempts to secure business support for its
climate change policies. "[Auctioning of credits] will be seen as a convenient
revenue-raiser for the government and not as genuine measures aimed at changing
behaviour," he said.
The revenue could also help jump-start the UK clean-tech sector, according to
Nussbaum, helping to ensure many of the green technologies that are currently "
within reach" are deployed on a larger scale.
The letter is the latest in a line of calls on the government for it to
introduce hypothesised green taxes whereby revenue raised is earmarked for
investment in environmental initiatives.
However, the Treasury has consistently rejected such calls arguing that it
diminishes the ability of government to react to unexpected spending
requirements. Earlier this year the government scrapped one of its few
hypothesised taxes, severing the link between revenue raised through the
landfill levy and funding for recycling and waste management projects.
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